Pubdate: Thu, 30 Jun 2005 Source: Brattleboro Reformer (VT) Copyright: 2005 Brattleboro Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.reformer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/59 Author: Andrew Ragouzeos, Reformer Staff Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH HAZARDS OUTLINED AT CONFERENCE BRATTLEBORO -- It'll get you high, and make you feel good. Then it'll take you down and can make you feel so bad that for the next year, you'll be unable to feel pleasure. The stimulant methamphetamine, or meth, is causing users to suffer long-term neurological damage at a level exceeding all other illegal drugs, according to health officials. Unlike cocaine or milder forms of speed that cause a release of dopamine (the body chemical responsible for good feelings) to linger for a prolonged period in the brain, meth prompts dopamine to be "released and released and to keep on being released, depleting the body's dopamine levels," Vermont Police Academy Coordinator Cynthia Tayler-Patch explained during a meth awareness conference on Wednesday. "After chronic use, it can take up to six months to a year for levels to replenish," she said. The conference, held at the Quality Inn and attended by 50 local law enforcement and social service workers, is part of the Department of Health's ongoing campaign to educate Vermonters in hopes that the state can avoid becoming another frontline in what's become a national meth epidemic. In 2004, there were 525 methamphetamine labs seized by law enforcement in California, 1,018 in Missouri, 393 in Kentucky, and one in Vermont, according to the National Clandestine Laboratory database. But experts warn that the eastward migration of the drug is ripe to hit Vermont in the not-too-distant future. One reason Vermont is a likely target is its rural makeup, according to Detective Michael Smith of the Vermont Drug Task Force. Because the drug is concocted in clandestine laboratories that emit a strong chemical smell, secluded and private locations inside shacks, trucks or trailers in the woods are desired locations, Smith said. "You don't even need electricity or running water to make it," he said. "And all the ingredients are legal in Vermont." Children ages 12-14 who live in rural areas are 104 percent more likely to take meth than their urban counterparts, the Drug Enforcement Agency reports. Along with the severe depression the drug can induce, other long-term effects include hallucinations, violent behavior, and insomnia. Often users will experience what is called "formication," when the user hallucinates that bugs are crawling on his/her skin. To get rid of the bugs the user will pick at their skin to such an extent that sores open up and lead to heavy and widespread scarring, Taylor-Patch said. The drug's presence in a community can be equally damaging, as many users are forced to steal to support their habits, and the labs themselves can be highly explosive. Meth, which is produced in tablet, powder and crystal form, can be made with several methods, all of which require mixing pseudoephedrine - -- the active ingredient in many cold medications -- with a host of other legal, yet highly toxic chemicals such as acetone, propane and ammonia. Production releases poisonous gasses into the air, and for every one pound of meth produced there are six pounds of toxic waste created. Dumping that waste into waterways, forests and farmland is also a common problem in areas where meth is prevalent. Meth can spread throughout a community quickly because it is easily made in large quantities, Smith said. One pound of the drug can be divided into 90,000 doses. It's also cheap. One gram of meth has a street value of around $200, but that gram can be cut into 200 doses. "We're not trying to scare people. We just want to be prepared," Smith said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin